Canard DuJour
Veteran Member
Yep. Meanwhile there's resentment among traditional Labour voters at the preceived flood of cheap foreign labour, particularly from the new eastern European member states. UKIP has been very good at conflating this with "Brussels bureaucracy" and "benefit (welfare) tourism." Labour has been been very bad at calling UKIP on it, because Labour is too reluctant to say anything that might sound xenophobic or acknowledge class conflict in what's "good for the economy" to address the discontent.UKIP is partly a result of the implosion of the British National Party (BNP). They're an anti-EU party rather than a right wing-nationalist party (in theory anyway), and have picked up many of the BNPs old supporters as well as some of their own. The other thing that helps them is that Conservative party (traditionally but not consistently anti-Europe) have been in coalition with the Liberal Democrats (the most pro-Europe major party), something which has annoyed both their supporter bases. So because it's 'just' a European election, both conservative and Liberal voters are likely to vote elsewhere, or not turn up, to punish their own part for their misdeeds. This is particularly true of the Conservatives, who are particularly feeling the bite of UKIP into their supporter base.
Thus a party for flat tax, franchising out key NHS services, removing employee protections which mostly originate from Brussels - basically the Tory party with bells on - has managed to blag a chunk of the Labour vote too.